Latest News

CANADA-CRUDE-Discount on Western Canada Select heavy crude unchanged

The discount between West Texas Intermediate (WTI), the North American benchmark, and Western Canada Select (WCS), heavy crude was unchanged on Sunday. It remained within the historically narrow range that it has traded at since spring.

WCS for June deliveries in Hardisty (Alberta) settled at $9.15 per barrel below the U.S. benchmark WTI according to brokerage CalRock.

Canadian heavy crude is trading at a discount, in part because the Trans Mountain expansion pipeline was opened a year ago. This increased the country's capacity to export oil. According to RBC Capital Markets, the average differential between WCS and WTI has narrowed by $23, or $4 over the last year.

* The tight WCS discounts also reflect tighter U.S. Sanctions on countries producing heavy crude, such as Venezuela. This is increasing demand for heavy crude producers who are not sanctioned.

* Oil prices dropped by over $1 a barrel to multi-year lows on Monday, after OPEC+ decided to accelerate its production increases. This decision stoked concerns about rising global supplies at a time of uncertain demand.

(source: Reuters)